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Originally published 1907. The author writes of clan life and the
internal disturbances which so marred the peace and prosperity of
the Highlands. Some thirty of these are discussed in detail. Many
of the earliest history books, particularly those dating back to
the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. Home Farm Books are republishing many of these classic
works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the
original text and artwork.
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Pamphlets (Hardcover)
Jesse Walter Fewkes; Created by John G Owens, Alexander Macgregor Stephen
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R981
Discovery Miles 9 810
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book questions the view of the current orthodoxy which argues
that the Soviet Union and the United States were binary opposites
in the 1930s. The Shaping of Popular Consent presents a comparative
analysis of one specific facet of the USSR and the US, namely the
manner in which their ruling elites sought to win popular consent.
A key dimension in the analysis of any political order, this issue
recommends itself precisely because the assumption that, in this
the two were quite dissimilar, is the virtual point of departure
for the current thinking. To sharpen the focus of the comparison,
the book concentrates on the role of the visual arts and the manner
and extent to which those in power employed them to attempt to win
popular consent. Therefore, this book poses two questions. Firstly,
to what extent did the ruling elites in both the USSR and the US
believe they needed the people's faith/trust in the system?
Secondly, different as the two societies were, to what extent might
they have employed similar use of visual cultural media in their
attempts to win "hearts and minds"? The study explores the interwar
years, specifically 1929-1941. This was an era of great upheaval in
both the USSR and the US and marks the beginning of the age of mass
communication. The book examines if, how, and to what extent Soviet
and American cultural producers, during the years 1929-1941,
employed the visual arts, cinema in particular but also painting,
the plastic arts, theatre and architecture, to promote,
essentially, the establishments' rights and wrongs, heroes and
villains. It does so exploring both the domestic and the
international scene. It illustrates that, despite giant differences
between the two countries, in the way the two establishments sought
to win popular consent the binary view is simply inaccurate.
Perhaps more importantly, it demonstrates the need for a plethora
of wide-ranging comparative studies of the Soviet Union and the
United States. Indeed, through recognizing the importance of
comparing and contrasting the USSR and the US, and by attempting to
do just that, we might learn to better understand how, in what ways
and for what purposes these two countries, so central to our
understanding of the modern world, were organized. Thus, this work
is genuinely comparative, inter-disciplinary and cultural. Indeed,
the study is part of a vanguard movement. It is of significant
value to scholars of both the USSR, Stalinism and Soviet art and
the US, the New Deal and Hollywood. Finally, building on work by
Noam Chomsky, Anotonio Gramsci and others such as Benedict
Anderson's book Imagined Communities, the book will be of
tremendous interests to many (both students and interested parties
alike) who have an interest in how identities are constructed, how
propaganda is manufactured and just how the (ostensibly) divergent
philosophies of modern governments are represented in popular
culture.
This volume gives an account of the feuds of the Highlanders of
Scotland. While most feuds stem from trivial causes, they have
always been a source for high literature, from the Iliad to the
Mahabharata. The Scottish feuds take on an epic quality of their
own, as they play out their grim logic of retribution. The first
part of this book was written by Rev. Alexander MacGregor, M.A., on
21st October, 1875, and delivered as a lecture to the Working Men's
Club at Inverness on 19th November, 1875. The second part is from a
manuscript written in the reign of King James VI. and first
published in 1764.
During the 1930s, the Catholic Church in the US was engaged in a
metaphorical 'war' against the increasingly modern and secular
values of the American public. Alexander McGregor offers a detailed
account of how the Church, feeling itself to be under siege, used
the media- and particulalrly cinema- to reach out to Americans. The
1930s were the 'golden age' for Hollywood, and the Church saw the
film industry as an opportunity to engender a pro-Catholic social
moral code amongst the US population. McGregor examines the ways in
which the American Catholic Church sought to directly influence
film production through its involvement with censorship bodies such
as the Legion of Decency. Led by two senior bishops, the Legion of
Decency's self-appointed task was to police the censorship process
of Hollywood films and ensure the moral exactness of the final
product. McGregor furthermore discusses wider themes in this
struggle for influence over the public sphere, such as the
representations of sex and sexuality in the media, and
representations of Americanism and patriotism in popular culture.
He thus highlights how the American Catholic Church represented
itself and its values, as well as how it perceived its opponents.
Finally, 'The Catholic Church and Hollywood' investigates the
apparent contradiction at the heart of this attempt to influence
the public through the medium of cinema: that a religious group,
claiming to be beholden to a higher law and power, would at the
same time seek to merge its public identity with secular
institutions. McGregor thus scrutinises the claim that in the
American polity, state and religion are completely separate.
Focusing on the Church's contempt for the public's newfound
interest in science, wealth and sexual liberation, Alexander
McGregor sheds light on both the social mores of the Catholic
Church and wider American society during this crucial period.
With Several Curious Instances Of Highland Customs And Beliefs.
Murder - the most appalling crime of all. It comes in many guises
and is diverse as the victims and perpetrators themselves. But no
matter how horrifying, it fascinates as much as it repels. In this
updated edition of THE LAW KILLERS, journalist Alexander McGregor
examines some of the country's most chilling cases and peels back
the civilised layers of our society to reveal some of the horrors
that lie beneath, including: The Templeton Wood Murders - Was the
same serial killer responsible and is he at last identified? Little
Boy Blue - The schoolboy with a continuing compulsion to kill.
Forgive Me Father - A trail of slaughter that spread to two
countries? Anything You Can Do - The country's most notorious
father and son who killed again and again. To Love, Honour . . .
and Kill - The double wife-killer who thought he had committed the
perfect murder...and nearly had. 'Alexander McGregor is the safest
pair of hands in Scottish true crime . . . accurate, detailed and
written with rare sensitivity - for good reason, The Law Killers
was a bestseller' Emeritus Professor David Wilson, leading UK
criminologist and presenter of In the Footsteps of Killers and
Crime Files
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Pamphlets (Paperback)
Jesse Walter Fewkes; Created by John G Owens, Alexander Macgregor Stephen
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R737
Discovery Miles 7 370
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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